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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1923)
Miners Trapped in Cave Escape Silver City. N.M.—Aug. 22.—Six of the seven miners trapped In & cave In at the Co-Operative Mining com pany’s property 14 miles from here yesterday were rescued alive earlly today. The seventh man, Pete Jones, was killed. The rescued men were cut off in a drift by the cave-in. They suffered no ill effects from their ex periences. Japan Starts on Job of Scrapping Ships Tokio. Aug. 22.—Official announce ment was made today that the scrap ping of warships in accord with the Washington treaties, ratifications of which have Just been exchanged by the signatory powers, would be car ried out immediately. The whites of eggs will beat much faster is thoroughly chilled. Cruiser Omaha Averages Speed of 34.87 Knots Per Hour Bremerton, Wash., Aug. 22.—The Scout Cruiser Omaha, recently com pleted at the Todd shipbuilding yards at Tacoma, developed an average speed of 34.87 knots in a four-hour full-speed test Monday It was an nounced at the Puget Sound navy yard today. The Omaha's turbines developed 04,500 hosepower and a speed of 386.43 revolutions per min ute. Bee Want Ads produce results. THE NEBBS— MOTHER’S DAY. Directed for The Omaha Bee by Sol Hess] Wow -DOES IT Time ! WILL CREST i? TEEL TO GET W SUCH A BEAUTIFUL BACK MOME? ) ^-^CE -OUR ROOM? Ts>r\ vou umjf / LwERE So PLEASANT a tavS t5ae ? / tme meals UuERE DELICIOUS !^/ -— -_ Y^nD SomETminG doing \ EuEQW MINUTE - SuiimminG, \ BOATING, DANCING AND VI BRIO GE _ I OUST MATED \ to leave But mv wuSBANDr ^UST WAD TO GET BACK J : To Business . --rrr: i iwx '■'Mil ' H I r I loxi. *>9 Tii* dell «>««*•■••*.-i"' ’H* AWtt we MET SOME or T4E\(ouEUSED TO Go \ l awELLEST PEOPLE PROM OlO \)AvaMW EuERV ), \ A«>STOCRATlC PAMIUES — ' SUMMER WUEN anO vou SwoulTD wasiE. t I iEEN VWE WAV VWEV "TREATED/ l' _ <dUST UKE I WAS A ) Bor PAPA AND I , QUEEN _ WERE GO'NG /LOUE OUR COMPORT fiTOR A LONGER STAV/I Too WELL^ to / NE<T VEAR 1 LEAVE OuR WOMEi <Trn4« 4»r£ »«f. r»i r THAT'S MVLL CQEST SHE'S \ TALKING ABOUT I MUST HA'JE \ BEEM SOME PLACE ELSE - SHE'S better "ThAH tVve pamphlet that coax-eo us there — \ mamma VS «)VJST beginning! |^\^TO ENvioU HER UA cation^ Cu.Pn Ce><a.WSo»s). BARNEY GOOGLE-— Well, Anyhow, There Are No Flies on Barney. Drawn for The Omaha Bee by Billy DeBeck UOMJS Vow Two PINS. TO &omngss I crock tug UJWOL6. X WIU.6X Wsocwwwttwi'A W Tr\-5 summer Tap. r VGSVCS PUGS ARP. So * Tm\CK x CANT KtV„? AN* UGV> ARCONO TAG PlAGt' /_ f-j «. 1 O G"16 A WUNQRGO X P^ffl \ 1JJC.U.ARS To ANVOt-Vfc /^TOO6®] ? 9 \ wwo HAtMJ ROW To A / t 1 RAVOON TUlS (NTRUSION X \ HtARO VCO MAKE THE CRACK \ A’aoUT EoRKWO OVIEC VOO \ RUCKS To AMVONE WMO CAN / _ COAX r«E cuts Our ©* J \ YOUR JOINT r MAKE. ( / ITS A \ \ \T TViJO MVJAjDREO \ GO « I ;aiuo insipe or an wouC \1 ( re. mate your ractort \ comv ) A”i clean as a Coes J \ oNJ lhmvstie « A«?e you ON^J^y I NEED JUST^aOO /y-v ENTER MV WOWSE ( IN "(nE (510 RACE y/^T HERE O" * A . CftNOV WORKS tOUOUJ me ■ BAtjy. AIL I Gotta DO IS 1«5 5>bag you turouiSw Tv»E FACTOR* K vyaoM ToV yfe J >n. SCjTTOM AMO J ^Sff\ TWE JOO / rgt'.X is curs'/ Copyright 1923. by King Features Syndicate, fnc vf^WSIELL. MP<Soo6it jj t r now tmat your "aoo r—r ■ is pwo YouR« ALL YI IB I SET foq The «'» , I) j V ■ VAORSt 5KOE HANDICAP/ -• B I >- A VMLCK f*OM n gw'"""-JySuM*)! 8UJ0|[^ stcfttaafifT Ln "A BRINGING UP FATHER— — u. sRpg«t'e'Sroifie« pace of colors in the Sunday bee Dfawn for The^Omaha Bee by McManus IVE ootjT ] OOE«b \T Ui esELEM READIN' MENTION ME THE PAPER * THE t>OOETY W^IE- l_ COLOMM? rr '' ft 0k H i.— i 11 r there'^> as picture of new Uj— YORK TAKE ts FROM AsTS AUR PLANE HERE YHAvT YOU M><*HT feEIN- j-p— '■"V.." 'Mr- i' ,<% EaMoiOTjl IT tiAYt> HERE THAT ^ WELL* IE THEY THE WOMEN ARE LON' HAVE TO WFHE? TO WEAR THEIR. ThPm . , , Jr”:: DREt>^ y T\ I II I YOU e>OY ME THEY'LL HJA/E TO e>E MADE Or i a 1 IRON - r • • / » 1923 ev Int'l Feature Service. Inc. C'T OUT OF ME ■ wam -1 ^uppo^e tooo UKETO L. HMiQ ME As. p Uia: g—rV (PffffHS 813T71 JERRY ON THE JOB— TIMELY ADVICE JUST IN TIME. Drawn for The Omaha Bee by Hoban ^ES- IT >OU MO »T VMOtfT . r^Ssrri^! C^soa*) <^A*iOUT “1 ^o^rr ^ Gome- \ '-1_UtJBtlj) M ^0\SRe1 [ <30»4 'To RavUU J 1 ®vn Pbc. <& "Tut K*>SE.6tfT 1 ■? I Cbuiorr vy' "TLat (5uvj Q\fT TUECeI vjakjte Tb Set ml, \ A NMLUON OOClAQsJ That -nc s:i5 \ \n\uu SE Late, | [ AGa\k> ToOdS^j •-oJBtggSi'* **** ** ,irrx_fcwv>e<. rue. ^VJP.L. --'-rA\oJ'-rwt3,, op /<ivi old j TltfEW /4NO ^ OOM~T BETy > Burgess Bedtime Stories By THORNTON W. BURGESS. A boasting tongue is sure to trip. And heedlessly to let truth situ. —Old Mother Natur*. Tlie Young Chuck Begins to Have Doubts. The young chuck, who had crept under Farmer Brown's barn, sat and stared at Bobber tho Bat with eyes that were round with wonder and admiration. Bobber was boasting. He saw right away that the young chuck believed all that he was told. Now, one trouble with a boaster Is that he never knows when to stop boasting. It was Just so with Bobber the Bat. To have heard him you would have thought that he was the most dar ing fellow in all the great world. You would have thought that he had been everywhere and seen every thing and was afraid of nothing. Bobber was making the most of an opportunity. You see, he is an outcast and despised by all the peo ple of tho Green Meadows and the Green Forest. None of them will speak to him or have anything to do with him. So Robber was making the most of this opportunity to appear all that he was not. He saw the ad miration in the eyes of the innocent young chuck, and it tickled his van ity. For awhile the young chuck drank it ail in and believed every word of it. But though this young chuck was innocent and knew nothing of the ..nth,i rrr,,'t on. . ‘‘Don't move,” whispered Robber the Rat. great world, he was by no means stupid. As he listened to the tales of Robber the Rat he took notice of everything around .him. At first he hadn't paid special attention to Rob ber's stories, it came over him that Robber was a very dirty fellow. His coat was rough and looked as if no care had been taken of it. He smelled unclean. "Goodness” thought the ^-oung chuck. "What a dirty fellow he is He looks as If he spends most of his time In dirty places, and this is a queer kind of a place for one who has been everywhere and is afraid of nothing to choose for a home.” It | was right then that doubt began to Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap.— Cuticura Coticurm So*; 1* Lb* favor Ufor*.?rfcxor*L*vie* A CHILD IN PAIN runs to Mother j relief. So do the grown-ups. F or sudden and severe pain in stomach •nd bowels, cramps, diarrhoea CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY l» ha* never been known to fail. Get more mileage out of your feet! by keeping them iree from corns and callouses. The nearest drug store skill supply the means— ! Cactus ol course. etas orn Cure Wonder What a Judge Thinks About By Briggs ANOTHER day op DULLNESS ... ILL J5E Glad when naY Term EXPIRES. Those Young attorneys WRanGLE all Day Long over nothing, | HAVEN'T THE l-AINTEST IDEA WHAT IT.S ABOUT EITHER. I ASK'EM A QUESTION once: in a wh»le uwe "what Date WAS Th/\T' Oft "WHERE ARE YOUIR witnesses" so They’li Think 1 M LISTENING To EVERY WORD,' » WI-SH OFFICER. <7on£S WOULD QUIT BRINGING in so MANY SPEEDERS I <£et vSICK And TTrED OP HI-3 ZEAL. Gosh That was A Good game. u-'E MAD LAST NIGHT | BROKE ABOUT EfUENl * ThIihK /\S -SOOi-o AS I 6£T A C'hanicf ill count MV' CMamcJF' Jo^st To sec MOW I CAMtH OUT.. I was f-ittT To The <2000 AT ONE Time I’M GoimG To Get To BED EarlY To M I ght Beusve. ME. There comes Jonies with amother victim I HOPE He CHOKE 3. I must pretend BEImG BORED To Death • as a matter of fact I AM I <$ I1JS nr Tl*C NEXT CASE HO <3 AM AGAINST KIOPOT5KY SAME old STUFF ABIE THE AGENT— _Drawn for The Omaha Bee by Hershfield' He Can't Stand the Caff. = ANt> YOU LL HO THROUGH YOUR. \' ILL BE THERE INITIATIONS AY THE CLUB TONIGHT v To THE SECcNb now yrh to Control Yourself l AWb ocn'v NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS'. Jl CUORR.Y ABOUT VLU MEET YOU AY EIQHT SHARP / , ANY CCNTROLUWC v^ANb CUE'LL HO OP TO THE j \A\YSCLR!: T~]iOPriATiow / ' ^ -C ■^VrOHETHER^/ ov, \LL QtY epeplbcv =-ke t U/A5. SUPPOSED TO K\EEY N'E C!0 T>US CORKED TU.'0 HOURS AQC ' PO^Y L\KE TH\S Vc\KiO OP wavyi^ for y<^ \ People v.: WMKtkfr Arqukq TfNQUJ VQU SHOU) UP »To KEEP V'S ■ ME UjMYltOQ 1(0 A, DRESS k»ofujUw^)'toU su>y oNTma corner for cSSdl£S»fJ 'IWO^UW.UWRDOMNN! OOHWOtNOMWRr FS\Ki‘V 1 SUPPOSED TO CTj^gT INVTIfrtEP TDMCiHY ? pr ^ NtS, IS PART OF creep Into the head of the young chuck. Then Just in the middle of one of Robber’s most boastful stories there was a slight noise just outside the hole through which the young chuck had entered. The young chuck looked over there. A pair of greenish-yel low eyc-s were glaring in. They looked so fierce that the young chuck felt little shivers of fear began to creep over him. Then he remembered that Robber the Rat was afraid of noth ing, and the little shivers stopped. Of course he was perfectly safe with such a brave fellow close at hand. But when he turned to look at Rob ber he found a great change In the boaster. My, my. it certainly was a change "Don't move," whispered Rob ber the Rat. "That is Black Pussy the Cat. You stay right here and don't move. She can't get in through that hole, so there is nothing to be afraid of.” Tiie young chuck looked back at those glaring eyes, and he hoped with all his might that Black Pussy couldn't get in through that hole. He turned to ask Robber if he was sure of this. Robber wasn't there! No, sir, Robber wasn't there • H* had stolen away without making a sound. The young chuck blinked. "He is afraid. Ye3, sir, he is afraid,” muttered the young chuck. "He ran away and left me here. He is a coward. That's what he is, a coward. Now, 1 don't believe a word of all the things he told me. Ugh! I don't like this place. I don't like tha't fellow. I don’t like dirty folks anyway. I'll get out of here as soon ns I can. Copyright. 1>23 ADVERTISEMENT. Childbirth Here U a wonderful message to all expectant mothers I When the Little One arrives, you can have that moment more free from suffering than you have perhaps imagined. An eminent physician* expert in this science, has shown the way. It was ho who first pro ducea the great remedy, •'Mother’s Friend." Mrs. C. J. Hartman, Scranton, Pa.* says: “With my first two children I had a doctor and a nurse, and then they had to use instru ments, but with my last two children I used Mother's Friend and had only a none; wo had no time to get a doctor because I wasn't very sick—only about ten or fifteen min utes.” Use "Mother’s Friend" as our moth* era and grandmothers did. Don’t wait, start today, and meanwhile write to Bradfield Regulator Co., BA 46, Atlanta, Ga., for a free illustrated book containing information every expectant mother should have. "Moth* er’s Friend" is sold by ad drug sWw -< everywhere. ADVERTISEMENT. This Leaves the Arms free from hairy growths I (Toilet Talks) A simple method for completely removing every trace of hair or fuxz is here given. This is painless and usually a single treatment will ban ish even stubborn growths. To re move hairs, make a thick paste with some powdered delator.e and water, spread on hairy surface and after about two minutes rub off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This method will not mar the skin, but to avoid disappointment, be certain you get delatone. ,\m ektisemevt Pimples BLOOD Impurities are pumped by the heart into the face. That is what causes that grainy appearance, that muddiness, sal lowness, pimples, blackheads. acne, red spots, and that impos sible “some thing” which no face cream, mas sage, or face powder can cover up or beautify! The foundation for a beautiful skin simply is rot there, and no face treatment can give it to you. But increase your red blood-cells,—and quickly the ruby tint of purity begins to glow ia the cheeks, the complexion be comes venus-like and immaculate! Try it. It will do it every time. S. S. S. builds the red-blood-cells you need for a beautiful complex ion. Begin using S. S. S. at once, and give yourself what you have been working for, for years. S. S. S. is sc'.d st sll |t«d drug stores ia two sites. Tb« larger sue is sore economical. World's Best ‘/fl oo d Medicine. VPV KRTISEMENT. WOMEN FROM FORTY TO FIFTY Will Belnterested in Mrs.Hooker’s Recovery by Use of Lydia E.Pink* ham's Vegetable Compound St.Paul.Minn.—"I was going through the Change of Life and suffered from a run-down condi tion and the trou bles a woman haa to go through at that time, hot Slashes, nervous ness and head aches. At times I was not able to do mv work, but sm o# taking Lydia E. Pir.kham's Vege table Compound I am gaining ev rry day and can do my wont with more rase than 1 have for five or six years. I owe it all to your great medicine.” — M vkth \ Hooker, in College Ave., St. 1'aul, Minn. W hen w omen who are between the ages of forty-five and fifty-five are besot wish such annoying symptoms as nervousness, irritability, melan cholia and heat flashes, which pro duce headaches, dizziness, or a sense of suiTooation.they should take l ydia h I'inkham’s \ egetable Compound. II is especially adapted to help women through this crisis. It is prepared from roots and horbs and contain® no harmful drugs or narcotics. Write to 1 ydia V'. ihnkham Medi cine l . 1 yr.n. Massachusetts, for a froo copy of 1 ydia V I'inkham'a 1 mate 11 \ Hook fgr Women